They'll be dismissed by those
who don't take the time to listen as just another pseudo-punk band with high ideals and a
strange devotion to The Buzzcocks and Stiff Little Fingers. An MTV-loving friend of mine
upon hearing them on my car stereo compared them to Green Day and The Offspring (ugh!),
until we got to "Terrorist" and "The Ideal" and he noticed that we
were driving about 90 in a 45.

This Boston 5-piece sports a gnashing, double-guitar attack that
epitomizes their name. The punk part is obvious, but the high-end production (this is no
DIY job) and rock-and-roll arrangements push it over the edge from stereotype to head
rush. Vocalist Matt Hock knows how to sing punk with melody -- he's not just another
atonal howler. And everything else just plain rocks with a blistering intensity that
Offspring/Green Day could never touch on their best day.

These fist-in-the-air anthems aren't so much about angst as anger,
frustration and warning, from another loser trapped in a plastic, corporate world he never
made. He may be too weak to escape, but he's strong enough to gather forces. We've heard
it all before in the first two punk waves, but Hock and company have managed to put
a new shine on this very old apple, thanks to unbridled chutzpah and ability to write a
damn fine hook. Each compact, 3-chord ditty sports a sonic nugget nestled among the power
chords and at least one clever line per song. Inspirational verse: "On the edge
of tomorrow/What are we fighting for?/We fight each other/Whenever we get bored."

Punk purists will cringe at how clean and tidy everything sounds,
and yeah, this really is a pop CD, but who cares? It's a huge leap in quality over their
first Jade Tree release (which was a rather boring affair), and is easily the best new
"punk-pop" CD I've heard in a couple years. Time: 27:22.